Speech by John Kerry at The Laksman Kadiragamar Institute.
Mangala, thank you very, very much. Thank you for a
wonderful introduction, notwithstanding that you reminded me that I
disappointed you in 2004. (Laughter.) I disappointed myself and a few other
people.
I am really happy to be here (inaudible) and I’m very happy
to welcome all of you here. No, you are welcoming me – it’s a mutual welcome,
admiration, effort. And I can’t thank Mangala and Sri Lanka enough for the very
generous welcome that you gave me this morning when I first came here. I came
over to that historic building that is now the foreign ministry. Thank you for
that, my friend.
I also want to thank you for your remarkable efforts – yours
and the president’s and prime minister’s – on behalf of the people of Sri
Lanka. And I thank you for something else. A week ago I was in northern Canada,
just below the Arctic Circle, not far from the Arctic Ocean, where I was
assuming the chairmanship of the Arctic Council. And I want you to know it is a
welcome change to enjoy the warm weather here. (Laughter.) I didn’t see a lot
of igloos around, happily.
I also want to say thank you to all of you who have come
here – students, educators, civil society activists, religious leaders, and to
everyone from the government, the diplomatic community, and the private sector
who has committed time to be here to share some thoughts this afternoon.
It is fitting that we gather today under the auspices of the
Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute. Lakshman was, to put it simply, a brave man and
a good man. He rejected recrimination in favor of reconciliation. He knew that
the future demanded that his country move beyond the more difficult chapters of
its past. And he devoted his last years to healing Sri Lanka and to leading it
to its rightful place within the community of nations. He said wisely, “We have
to live in Sri Lanka as Sri Lankans, tolerating all races and religions.”
So many of you here are the fathers and mothers of this vision. But as any parent will tell you, your obligations don’t end with a child’s birth; they’re just beginning. Sri Lanka’s newfound civil peace has to be nurtured; it must be allowed to grow and become stronger until it is, in fact, fully mature.
If Lakshman Kadirgamar was here and he had lived to see this
new era, I know he would be inspired by the people of this country – Sinhalese
and Tamil, Buddhist, Hindu, Christian, and Muslim. He would see the
possibilities of a Sri Lanka reconciled, democratic, and prosperous, with a
united and entrepreneurial people dedicated to making their country a shining
jewel of the Indian Ocean and of the broader Indo-Pacific. The United States, I
am here to tell you, believes in that vision. We believe in the potential of
Sri Lanka, the potential of Sri Lanka’s people – and I mean all of its people.
And I can assure you that the United States, that America will stand with you
by your side as you build a stronger democracy and a future that is marked by
peace and prosperity after so many years of suffering and hardship.
Now, I don’t have to tell you that history. You know it;
you’ve lived it. You’ve experienced it for 30 years. Terrorism, sectarian
violence, suffering, death, anger, disappearances, moments of hope followed by
more loss, more hate, and more fear.
Having gone to war myself, as Mangala mentioned, not very
far from here, I know the tragic truth that in peacetime, children bury their
parents, but in wartime, parents bury their children. Sri Lanka has known too
many generations of parents forced to bury children.
Let me be very clear about this: It is sometimes necessary
to go to war, despite the pain it brings. For all of my country’s disagreements
with the previous government in Sri Lanka over how it fought the LTTE, we
clearly understood the necessity of ridding this country of a murderous
terrorist group and the fear that it sowed.
I believe that you learned in the final, bloody days of that
struggle what my country discovered to our own anguish during our civil war:
There were no true victors – only victims. You saw, I trust, that it is obvious
the value of ending wars in a way that builds a foundation for the peace to
follow.
And I know you recognize today that the true peace is more
than the absence of war. True and lasting peace, especially after a civil
conflict, requires policies that foster reconciliation, not resentment. It
demands that all citizens of the nation be treated with equal respect and equal
rights, and that no one be made to feel excluded or subjugated. It calls for a
military that projects its power outward to protect its people, not inward to
police them.
It necessitates, as America’s great president Abraham
Lincoln said, binding up the nation’s wounds, with malice towards none and with
charity towards all.
Today, there are young people in this country who are
experiencing peace for the first time in their lives. We need to hope, we need
to make certain that they will know anything – that they will never know
anything except for peace.
And that isn’t easy – recovering from conflict, believe me,
never is easy. Under President Sirisena’s leadership, Sri Lanka’s traditions of
critical debate, free press, and independent civil society are returning. The
armed forces have started to give back land to people in the north. Your
citizens have been asked to mourn all the dead – not just those from one part
of the country or one ethnicity or one faith. Incidents of violence have
decreased.
The government has stood up against hate speech and created
a presidential task force on reconciliation led by former President
Kumaratunga. And just this week, the parliament passed and the president
championed, as Mangala said, a constitutional amendment that actually limits
the powers of his office. Promise made; promise kept.
Now, the problems of Sri Lanka are clearly going to be
solved by Sri Lankans. That’s the way it ought to be, but it’s also the only
way it’s going to work. And you wouldn’t have it any other way.
But if – but we also know that, in today’s world, everyone
and everything is connected. And when we are connected unlike any time in
history – everybody’s walking around, even in places where they’re poor, with a
smartphone and a cellphone; they’re in touch, they’re in touch with the world.
So if there are steps the United States can take to help, we will do so. I know
you have your own plan and your own notions about what is necessary, and by no
means whatsoever do we intend to try to usurp that or evade that or dismiss
that. That would be inappropriate and unwise at the same time. But we do have
some suggestions, as friends. And let’s offer four possible areas for
cooperation.
First – reconciliation. The majority of you voted for a
government that is committed to the difficult task of literally healing the
wounds of war. But that’s a difficult job with many components.
Years ago, I want you to know that when I was a member of
the United States Senate – in the early years in the ‘90s, Mangala– I was put
in charge of an investigation to try to determine the fate of American
soldiers, sailors, and aviators who were still missing from the Vietnam War
during the 1960s and the 1970s. The families of those in America whose loved
ones had been lost were desperately trying to get answers from the government
and demanding answers, and they had every right to do so. And we knew that it
was impossible for us to try to move forward if we didn’t try to provide those
answers. So we did everything possible that there was to try to find out what
happened to their loved ones. I traveled to Vietnam something like 17 or 20
times in the span of two years, working with the Vietnamese to let us into
their history houses, to their museums, to their documents – even to interview
with the generals that we had fought against to see if we could provide those
answers.
So we experienced the same emotions and the same search for
answers that are present in your country today. And that is why it is so
critical for your government to work with the ICRC and the UN in order to
investigate missing person cases and try wherever you can – I can’t guarantee
it; nobody can that you’ll find the answer for sure – but try to find wherever
the truth may lead. No matter how painful that truth is. It’s the right and the
humane thing to do – and it is, believe it or not, an essential part of the
healing process.
Now, reconciliation obviously doesn’t happen all at once; it
requires time and concrete actions. And those have to replace the suspicion
with mutual trust and mutual fears have to be replaced with mutual confidence.
I want you to know that the United States stands ready to be a partner with you
in that effort.
We’ll do all we can to support the government as it makes
progress in such areas as returning land, limiting the role of the military in
civilian life, and trying to provide the answers on disappeared people. None of
us wants to live in a country where the military is stopping its own citizens
at checkpoints. And Sri Lanka’s military has so much more to contribute in
defending this country, protecting vital sea lanes, and taking part in UN
peacekeeping missions all over the world. And as your armed forces make that
transition, we’re going to be very eager to work with you and to work with them
and to help.
That said, the job of bringing Sri Lankans together also
cannot be done by the government alone. So it matters what you say, it matters
what people say, and that they have the right to say it. It matters what civil
society – that many of you here represent – what you have to say. It matters
what religious groups are saying and what they’re able to accomplish, and that
they have the freedom to be able to move to do so. And it matters what
communities are able to do in order to fix the kind of social problems that
impact everyone – from promoting health care and a clean environment to
countering domestic violence and drug use – and that the central government
trusts people to take the lead.
Now in all this – some may think this goes without saying,
but in too many parts of the world it doesn’t – the women of Sri Lanka are
playing a critical role, and must. They are helping the needy and the
displaced. They’re encouraging people to build secure and prosperous
neighborhoods. They are supporting ex-combatants and survivors of sexual and
gender-based violence, and they’re providing counseling and other social
services. And these efforts are absolutely vital and we should all support
them.
But we also have to do more than that. Here, as in every
country, it’s crystal clear that for any society to thrive, women have to be in
full control – they have to be full participants in the economics and in the
political life. There is no excuse in the 21st century for discrimination or
violence against women. Not now, and not ever.
Now, that brings me to the second area of possible
cooperation on justice and accountability. Restoring your country’s judiciary
is a long-term undertaking that requires high standards for judicial
independence, fairness, and due process under the law. Those reforms are often
difficult to achieve anyway – we’re still working on some things in our system,
believe me; you can see some of it on television – not easy, but it is
absolutely essential to be open and honest about trying to do it. Every citizen
has a right to seek justice, and every citizen has a right to expect justice
for victims of war crimes or crimes against humanity. They’re painful issues; I
know that. But if you try to compel people to simply forget the past and try to
wipe it away, believe me: They will be more likely, not less, to cling to it.
And if you tell them to forego justice under the law, they will be more likely
to seek it outside of the law. It will be harder, not easier, to move forward
as one country at peace.
And that is why we hope your government will continue to
cooperate with the United Nations as it explores the best way to mount a
credible domestic investigation into allegations of human rights abuses – an
investigation that meets international standards and at the same time, and most
importantly, is legitimate in your eyes, in the eyes of the people here. The
United States is prepared to furnish whatever legal, whatever technical
assistance, whatever help we can to support Sri Lanka as it moves down this path.
A third area where we can work together is the advancement
of human rights, here and around the world. The new government that you’ve
elected is laser focused on establishing a strong reputation for your country
on human rights. And the United States could not be more supportive of that
goal. Until just recently, our diplomats routinely clashed with yours on these
issues at the Human Rights Council in Geneva and the UN in New York. Now, with
the new government, with the turning of this critical page, we have an
opportunity to work together. But we also continue to urge your government to
release remaining political prisoners, and we would be pleased to assist in
those efforts by sending a team of legal experts to advise on assessment and
release, which is a critical component of the documents that have to be made in
that.
And I say this fully mindful of the fact – believe me – no
nation, including the United States, has a perfect record on human rights. We
all have to do our best in order to improve. And I hope that the momentum that
has been created in Sri Lanka will continue to build, and I’m confident that
with the government you have and their commitments reiterated to me today, I
have no doubt that you will.
Now, a final challenge on which our two governments may be
able to work together is the strengthening of democratic institutions. Here,
you have a very strong foundation on which to build. Your former president
reminded me that they had lunch, that you had the first – the longest serving
supreme court in all of Asia, and that you have one of the oldest parliaments.
You have this extraordinary foundation on which to build. We simply offer our
support to help you in any way that we can on this effort of capacity building
and the challenge of restoring the tradition that you have always had with
respect to the fullness of your democracy. We want to help support you in the
upcoming electoral processes. Timely elections will be yet another sign of the
government following through on its commitments.
Now, the people of Sri Lanka deserve great credit for the
recent elections. And I want to congratulate all of you. They’re quite
remarkable. You turned out in huge numbers to exercise your rights. Every vote
was a victory for your country. And you insisted on historic reforms, including
a constitutional amendment that was just restoring the independence of the
electoral commission. But hard work remains, my friends, including devolving
power to the provinces. The United States stands ready to provide technical
assistance to make it easier to implement these measures and to strengthen such
critical institutions as the ministries and parliament. We’re also ready to
help with asset recovery and the enforcement of anti-corruption rules. Our
investigators are prepared to work with your investigators. Our prosecutors are
prepared to work with your prosecutors. And we commit that any stolen assets in
the United States will be returned to their rightful owners.
We’ve seen in recent decades that free countries can learn
from one another, and that, to prosper, they have to be prepared to help one
another. And that is why I’m pleased to announce that our governments will
launch a partnership dialogue to intensify our cooperation across the board.
President Obama has nominated a new ambassador, and as a symbol of our renewed
commitment to this relationship, I am happy to announce that we are going to
build a new embassy compound. And our partnership dialogue and expanded
bilateral assistance will help consolidate Sri Lanka’s very impressive gains.
We also want to do this in a spirit of friendship and mutual respect. We’re not
doing this as part of any global countering or whatever – make your choices.
That’s your right as independent people. But we appreciate and respect and
admire the steps that have been taken by you to give yourself a government that
wants to restore that government. And in any way that we can help, we stand
ready to do so.
So to sum up, Sri Lanka is at a pivotal point. Peace has
come, but true reconciliation will take time. Your institutions of governance
are regaining strength, but further progress will have to be made. The United
States will help when and where we can. And no part of this transition,
obviously, will be easy, but if Sri Lanka keeps moving forward, I have every
confidence it will take its rightful place of respect and of influence on the
world stage.
Sri Lankans should take enormous pride – I’m sure you do –
in what has been happening within your borders. But every nation also has to look
beyond its borders as well.
For Sri Lankans, that’s nothing new. Your country sits at
the crossroads of Africa, South Asia, and East Asia. And for centuries, it’s
served as a gateway for merchant ships. The Indian Ocean is the world’s most
important commercial highway. Today, 40 percent of all seaborne oil passes
through the Strait of Hormuz and half of the world’s merchant fleet capacity
sails through the Straits of Malacca. And with its strategic location near
deep-water ports in India and Myanmar, Sri Lanka could serve as the fulcrum of
a modern and dynamic Indo-Pacific region.
The questions now are: How do we get there and what role can
the United States play in that journey? Well, let me answer that question by
saying that we see our role partly as a leader, because we have a strong
economy and an ability to be able to project, but also we see our role as a
convener, and most importantly, as a partner.
The United States is already providing leadership on
maritime security in the India Ocean in association with close friends and
allies across the region, including India, Australia, Indonesia, and Japan. And
that requires, in part, a focus on counter-piracy and counter-trafficking
operations. It requires investments in humanitarian assistance and disaster
relief, so that the next big storm doesn’t inflict catastrophic damage on
coastal communities. The United States and Sri Lanka are also working together
to oppose the use of intimidation or force to assert a territorial or maritime
claim by anyone. And we reject any suggestion that freedom of navigation and
overflight and other lawful uses of the sea and airspace are somehow privileges
granted by big states to small ones. They’re not privileges; they’re rights.
And these principles bind all nations equally. And the recent decision by
India, Myanmar, and Bangladesh to submit to binding arbitration – that’s an
example of how maritime claims can be resolved peacefully and through
good-faith negotiations.
Now, I’ve said convene also – is a convener. The United
States is also a convener when it comes to promoting economic integration.
South Asia is one of the globe’s least economically integrated regions. Trade
among its countries amounts to some 5 percent of total trade and the cost of
doing business across borders due to non-tariff barriers, import duties, and
bottlenecks at border crossings is a huge impediment to growth.
That is why the United States is promoting the Indo-Pacific
Economic Corridor to connect South Asia to Southeast Asia and to spur sustainable
development in both regions. IPEC will strengthen energy, transit, trade, and
people-to-people ties – on land and sea. And the challenge is: What’s the pace
going to be of this integration? If commerce across South Asia is going to
become the economic driver that it ought to be, governments have to act with
urgency, not settle for half-measures or wait for the next country to go first.
And we look forward to working with the Sri Lankan Government as it increases
trade and investment with its neighbors in the Indian Ocean and beyond.
So the United States I’ve described as a leader and
convener. Most importantly, though, I want to talk about being a partner. We’re
a partner in something like disaster relief, climate change, clean energy. Here
in Sri Lanka, you lived through the devastating impact of the 2004 tsunami.
I’ll never forget hearing the news. The images are absolutely extraordinary,
gut-wrenching –entire towns obliterated; raging waters sweeping away people’s
homes; hundreds of thousands killed and many more separated from families.
And after the devastation, the American people moved quickly
and generously to provide relief. And I’m proud that the United States Marines
were among the first responders in the recovery efforts. And USAID alone provided
about $135 million of assistance, with many millions more coming from the
American people’s personal donations.
The earthquake that caused the tsunami was unprecedented in
its destructive impact. And as searing as images from Kathmandu this week
remind us, the nations of this region have to find common cause in enhancing
the preparedness for natural disasters. But we also know that because of
climate change, we’re actually going to be facing more frequent and intense
disasters across the board. I’m not drawing that out of thin air, and I hate to
be the bearer of that kind of a warning, but it’s science that’s telling us –
the IPCC of the United Nations, the world’s scientists. And we’re seeing the
changes already in so many different places, including the Arctic, that I
visited the other day. So the United States stands ready to help respond and
prevent climate change by leading the world towards a global agreement at the
end of this year in Paris.
I can’t tell whether one storm – nobody can – or another
storm specifically was caused by climate change, but I can tell you that
scientists are telling us unequivocally that there will be more storms of
greater intensity unless we stop and reverse course in what we are doing to
send greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
Now, some people might shrug their shoulders and just say,
“Well, there’s nothing that I can do about it.” That’s not true. There’s
something everybody can do about it. In fact, all of us know exactly what we
have to do. The solution to climate change is a transformed energy policy. Just
as climate change presents the United States, Sri Lanka, and the region with a
common threat, my friends, the need to develop secure and sustainable energy
sources presents us with a remarkable shared opportunity – the greatest market
in the history of humankind. It’s an opportunity to make the right choices
about conservation, about wind power, or solar power, hydro – which you have,
significantly – about fuel and utility standards, about efficiency standards,
about building codes, about transportation. And we can – and with all those
things – reduce the emission of greenhouse gases and save ourselves, save the
planet, literally, from a catastrophe that would be the unrestrained effects of
climate change.
Good energy solutions are good climate solutions. And the
market represents a multi-trillion dollar opportunity, with 4 to 5 billion
users around the world today. Just so you have a little comparison on that, the
market of the 1990s that drove our economy to the greatest wealth creation
since the early 1900s was a $1 trillion market, not multitrillion. And it had
one billion users. And that was the technology, communications market. The
energy market is 6, 7 trillion now and rising – maybe 9 by the mid part of the
century. By 2040, investment in the energy sector is expected to reach nearly
$20 trillion. That’s a lot of money, my friends – that’s a lot of jobs. So we
want to see clean, accessible energy be the biggest slice of the economic pie.
Now, of course, Sri Lanka is much more of a marketplace for
clean energy. It is much more than simply a market to attract clean energy, and
you know that, and I know that. It’s a cultural model; it’s a huge economic
mosaic. It could well become, as you march down this road with the
effectiveness you have been these days, a model for democracy and the
restoration of democracy. It could show unity in remarkable ways to the region.
We see even now, regrettably, that there are signs – troubling signs that
democracy is under threat in Maldives, where former President Nasheed has been
imprisoned without due process. And that is an injustice that must be addressed
soon. But Sri Lanka’s story carries the promise that people can hold their
government accountable, use peaceful dissent, use the power of the ballot box
and change the course of history. And we can already see here the power of that
promise.
We see it in the hard work of a Sinhalese mother who
struggles to give her child a good education. We see it in the dignity that
comes when a young Tamil man secures a job in which he can take pride. We see
it in the common desire of all Sri Lankans to live in a safe neighborhood and a
secure nation. We see it in the demand that leaders protect the rights of
people and be responsive to the basic needs and aspirations. Those are the
values that connect all of us across every boundary, no matter our history, no
matter our background, no matter our beliefs and our creed. That’s who we are.
Now, I want to leave you with just one story of that kind of belief today.
Karthika is from a Tamil Hindu family. When she was 14, the
Tigers kidnapped her and sent her north to Jaffna. She was forced to carry a
gun and move through the jungle. She was given barely enough food to survive.
And in a firefight one day, bullets and shrapnel blinded her in one eye. For 11
years, her family had no idea whether she was alive or dead.
Eventually, Karthika escaped that hell by fleeing through
areas of heavy fighting. She returned home, but in many ways, her struggle was
only just beginning. She had limited education, limited skills, having spent
half her life surrounded by war. She had few friends, and even fewer prospects
to find a job or even to start a life.
After several false starts, Karthika found a USAID program
in the Eastern Province that offered her a way out. She trained for months and
learned the skills she needed to get her a job in a new garment factory. She
started earning an income. And she made an effort to befriend women from the
Sinhalese community, something that would have been unimaginable for her just a
few short years ago. Asked why she was able to find hope when others didn’t,
Karthika said very simply, “Now, it has changed.”
My friends, everywhere there is an injustice, there are men
and women who are ready to be the Karthikas of their moment. Men and women who
survive a war that wrecks families, and then build their own. Men and women who
see what the worst of what people can do, and then dedicate their lives to
finding the best in others. You have all borne the costs of war. It’s now time
for you to experience and hold onto the benefits of peace. “Now, it has
changed” is a claim that each and every one of you can make together. And I am
certain that you will make it a proud claim – a badge of merit and honor and
success that will be heard and seen by your neighbors and friends all across
the globe.
So thank you once again for welcoming me here. It’s an honor
for me to be here at this point in your history. And I can tell you that we
will not walk away from our pledge to work with you, to go together on this
road and on this journey. Good luck to all. Godspeed on the road ahead. Thank
you.
No comments:
Post a Comment